Fermented Dill Pickles
- 2/3 cup pickling salt
- 1/4 head green cabbage, cut into 2-inch pieces
- 8 cloves garlic
- 8 fresh grape or black currant leaves, each the size of a silver dollar
- 12 dried red chile peppers (optional)
- 4 large heads fresh crown dill (bloomed dill), stems trimmed (or 4 teaspoons dried dill seeds)
- 30 to 40 Persian or other small cucumbers (about 6 inches long and 1 inch thick)
- Four 1-quart canning jars
- Canning rack or kitchen towel
- Large stockpot
- Jar lifter or tongs
- Funnel (optional)
- Grape leaves keep the pickles crisp.
- Ask for them at a farmers' market, or as an alternative, add 1/2 teaspoon alum powder to each jar before filling.
- Sterilize the jars: Wash the jars, lids and bands in hot soapy water and rinse well.
- Place a canning rack or folded kitchen towel in the bottom of a stockpot and fill halfway with water.
- Add the jars, making sure they are submerged.
- Bring to a boil and boil 10 minutes.
- Remove with a jar lifter or tongs and place on a clean towel.
- Put the lids and bands in a saucepan of simmering water until ready to use.
- Make the brine: Combine 13 cups water with the pickling salt in a large pot and bring to a boil, whisking to dissolve the salt.
- Set aside.
- Fill the jars: In the bottom of each sterilized jar, add a layer of cabbage leaves, 1 garlic clove, 1 grape leaf, 2 chiles and a tuft of crown dill.
- Pack the jar with cucumbers, standing them upright and getting in as many as you can.
- Top each jar with another garlic clove, grape leaf, chile and tuft of crown dill.
- Add the brine: Ladle the hot brine into each jar (use a funnel if you have one), leaving 1/8 inch headspace.
- You may not need all of the brine.
- Close the jars: Wipe the jar rims with a cloth dipped in boiling water.
- Screw the sterilized lids on tight-as tight as you possibly can.
- Ferment the pickles: Once the jars cool, transfer them to a warm place (75 degrees For so) and let the pickles ferment 1 week.
- This is the warm jump-start period; the brine should get cloudy and the lid tops should become tight with pressure.
- Then transfer the jars to a cool, dark place and wait at least 6 weeks and up to6 months before eating.
- Be careful opening the jars-fermentation causes the brine to carbonate and it may spray.
- And don't worry if the garlic changes color; it's still edible.
- Photograph by The Ingalls
pickling salt, green cabbage, garlic, currant, red chile peppers, dill, cucumbers, canning jars, canning rack, stockpot, lifter, funnel
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/amy-thielen/fermented-dill-pickles.html (may not work)